This article reports on an ethnographic study of the
multinational commercial surrogacy industry. The Surrogacy is an arrangement,
often supported by a legal agreement, whereby a woman agrees to delivery/labor
for another person or people, who will become the child's parent(s) after
birth. With the globalization of fertility demand and market, more and more
families in developed countries choose to get their own children through
surrogacy. Under such circumstances, intensive ‘surrogacy factories’ emerged in
some third world countries and the surrogacy industry has become an inevitable
topic in globalization. This article focuses on the interaction between the
‘surrogate mother’ and ‘the client’ in the surrogacy industry. In particular,
we pay attention to how surrogates rationalize their moral behavior in this
process, and how surrogates' bodies are commodified in the globalized economic
interactions. And also, we try to examine the racial, religious and class
inequalities contained in this huge "gray" industry from the
perspective of cultural anthropology.
Author(s) Details:
Peng Jiabao,
Graduate Student in Anthropology at the School of Sociology and
Anthropology of Xiamen University at Xiamen in the Fujian Province, P. R.
China.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/AEGIE/article/view/13586
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